Average Americans choose one of the top three options. I don’t think this is anything to be proud of. Today I am asking you to step out of your everyday lives and pay attention.

Right now in the region of Darfur, Sudan, there is a worldwide human rights tragedy. There is genocide, ethnic cleansing and murder. So do any of these words grab your attention?

Open warfare started in Darfur in early 2003 when a government-backed terrorist group systematically began raping and murdering the black population. Two years later, the Janjaweed militia has killed over 400,000 people. Nobody is immune; anybody can be a victim, including babies, children, elderly, men and women.

This is one 19-year-old girl’s story:

“I was living with my family in Tawila and going to school when, one day, the Janjaweed came and attacked the school. We all tried to leave the school, but we heard noises of bombing and started running in all directions ... The Janjaweed caught some girls: I was raped by four men inside the school ... When I went back to town, I found that they had destroyed all the buildings. Two planes and a helicopter had bombed the town. One of my uncles and a cousin were killed in the attack.”

Why isn’t the United States doing anything about this? No one can argue that we don’t have the resources and the compassion. Is it because we are already involved in Iraq? Is if because Sudan has no oil? It’s oil vs. human life. We need to make the decision as to what’s more important. I don’t understand how anybody who claims to be a caring human can put politics ahead of something like this. This genocide can be stopped. After Somalia, we said “Never again.” After Rwanda, we said “Never again.” Yet here we are.

To anyone who read this letter all the way through, congratulations; you are now more informed than most Americans. Now what are you going to do?